• 3/2/2021
  • Reading time 6 min.

Celebrating 50th anniversary with TUM-Hyperloop in birthday show

Happy Birthday, Sendung mit der Maus!

It's the mouse's birthday – and at TUM we're celebrating #mitderMaus, too! We wish the popular TV program "Sendung mit der Maus" (WDR) all the best for its 50th birthday anniversary on March 7. We've come up with a few surprises, and our Hyperloop is even included in your birthday show.

Grafik 50 Jahre Sendung mit der Maus / Bild: WDR WDR
Grafik 50 Jahre Sendung mit der Maus / Bild: WDR

Happy birthday, dear mouse! Thank you for 50 years of making us curious and enthusiastic about nature, technology and science! Why is the sky blue? What causes lightning? And how does the internet work? With your stories to laugh and learn, you have certainly inspired many of us to understand and explore the world, and to improve people's lives with research and innovation. We congratulate you from the bottom of our hearts and celebrate #mitderMaus.

We're happy to be a part of your birthday show – and we've also brought you a few more birthday presents and memories.

How does the Hyperloop work? Two students show it in the birthday show

How will we be traveling in the future? With the Hyperloop, perhaps - on which a team from TUM is also conducting research? In the birthday show on March 7, our students Domenik Radeck and Wonyoung Choi demonstrate how this superfast train of the future is supposed to work, when it travels through a tube at almost the speed of sound one day ("Geburtstagssendung mit der Maus“, 9:a.m. on ARD, 11:30 a.m. on Kika and afterwards in the ARD media library). Whatch Hyperloop film at 45’47 minutes (Youtube).

Display external content

At this point content of an external provider (source: www.xyz.de) is integrated. When displaying, data may be transferred to third parties or cookies may be stored, therefore your consent is required.

You can find more information and the possibility to revoke your consent at www.tum.de/datenschutz.

Mouse print as birthday present: Bread from the 3D printer

It looks like shortbread – but it's something different: PhD students Ahmed Fahmy and Martin Heckl from the Chair of Brewing and Beverage Technology at the TUM School of Life Sciences have baked, or actually printed, a mouse loaf from the 3D printer for the mouse's 50th birthday. First, the young scientists modeled an image of the mouse on the computer, then translated it for 3D printing using slicer software, and finally printed it out in about 30 minutes using a 3D printer – and even baked it at the same time. This printer is used for research by the group of PD Dr. Mario Jekle, and has been extensively adapted and optimized for food processing. The dough for the mouse is a mixture of wheat starch, soy protein isolate and water. During printing, the mouse was heated, i.e. 'baked', with an infrared beam using a so-called inline heating process.

 

Display external content

At this point content of an external provider (source: www.xyz.de) is integrated. When displaying, data may be transferred to third parties or cookies may be stored, therefore your consent is required.

You can find more information and the possibility to revoke your consent at www.tum.de/datenschutz.

And how does the 3D mouse bread taste? "A bit like a cookie, but we're still working on a real 'mouse' flavor," says Ahmed Fahmy. Incidentally, the research group headed by Dr. Mario Jekle is researching this process in order to better understand the production of foods such as baked goods on the one hand and to make it much more accurate on the other. In the future, this will make possible completely new and individualized products and new quality characteristics. Jekle: "When we were children, the Mouse show inspired us to stay curious and always keep learning. With our 'Mouse Print', we want to thank her with all our heart."

Delicious and healthy: Our birthday cake with lots of fruit

How can you make a delicious and at the same time healthy birthday menu? That's what the team led by Prof. Hans Hauner at the Else Kröner Fresenius Center for Nutritional Medicine (EKFZ) at TUM asked itself, and built a multi-level cake! This XXL cake is of course intended for a huge anniversary celebration. For all those who would like to join in at home, here is the very simple recipe: Spread a wafer-thin layer of jam on small cakes and top with fresh seasonal fruit. That’s about it.

In principle, the nutrition experts at the EKFZ recommend adequate and balanced diet. This includes fruit and vegetables, of course, as children love colours and so their food should be colourful, too. More tips on healthy earing are provided by the EKFZ, which has been focusing on childhood nutrition since October 2020.

Mouse Door Opener Day at our Research Neutron Source

We also fondly remember the many Mouse Open Door Days Opener at the Heinz Meier-Leibnitz Research Neutron Source in Garching. The video was made by the Heinz Meier-Leibnitz Center (MLZ), under whose organizational umbrella the scientific work of the neutron researchers at TUM, Forschungszentrum Jülich and Helmholtz-Zentrum Geesthacht is combined.

Display external content

At this point content of an external provider (source: www.xyz.de) is integrated. When displaying, data may be transferred to third parties or cookies may be stored, therefore your consent is required.

You can find more information and the possibility to revoke your consent at www.tum.de/datenschutz.

Doors open at the Deutsches Museum: TV shoot for the mouse (2011)

In 2011, Mouse presenter Ralph Caspers and his camera team visited the Deutsches Museum in Munich and took a look behind the doors of one of the world's largest science and technology museums.

Incidentally, the Deutsches Museum is not only home to our experimental laboratory, the TUMlab, but man an exhibitions has been designed together with our researchers. As a Leibniz Institute, the museum is also a research partner of the TUM, whose Director General Prof. Dr. Wolfgang M. Heckl holds the Chair of Scientific Communication at the TUM. The museum was founded over 100 years ago by our alumnus and electricity pioneer Oskar von Miller.

What causes lightning? Factual story from the high-voltage hall (2006)

What happens when lightning strikes a car with 850,000 volts? Armin Maiwald and Willi Weitzel tried it out in the TUM lightning laboratory, or more precisely: the high-voltage hall at the TUM Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering .

Technical University of Munich

Corporate Communications Center

Back to list

News about the topic

HSTS